Clouds/met
Thread Starter
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 8
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From: cambridge, UK
Clouds/met
Hi
Now I'm not sure if I'm just slow but i cant seem to remember all the clouds and what they do.
Does anyone have any material or a fun and easy way to remember them?
IT WOULD BE DEEPLY APPRECIATED
Thanks
Simon
Now I'm not sure if I'm just slow but i cant seem to remember all the clouds and what they do.
Does anyone have any material or a fun and easy way to remember them?
IT WOULD BE DEEPLY APPRECIATED
Thanks
Simon

Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 1,669
Likes: 5
From: uk
Strange question. They all 'do' the same thing generally. Block the view!!
Just watch out for CB's. (Clappy Bangers) Avoid if you can.
Cumuliform (Simpsons clouds)
Different levels of cloud? Any MET book can give you just what you need.
Just watch out for CB's. (Clappy Bangers) Avoid if you can.
Cumuliform (Simpsons clouds)
Different levels of cloud? Any MET book can give you just what you need.

Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 177
Likes: 0
From: EGNM
Do you mean that you're having troubling linking the name (e.g. in a METAR) to what you expect? If this is the case you just have to remember your Latin (remember it is mandatory that all pilots know Latin!). There only a few words you add together to describe 90% of the common clouds:
Stratus = Layer
Cumulus = Heaped
Cirrus = Wispy
Alto = Middle
Fracto = Broken
Nimbo = Rain-bearing.
So from this you can interpret "Stratocumulus" as a layer of heaped cloud, "Altostratus" as a mid-level layer of cloud, "Cumulonimbus" as a heaped cloud that is raining and so on and so forth. There's only a few common types that you see the majority of the time and a few that you'll never see since they don't make really sense (e.g.cirronumbus or altocirrus).
I'm sure some cleverrichard will come along and detail the caveats in even more boring detail to make themselves feel better about themselves, but what I've written above has been enough for me to work in meteorology for six years.
Hope this helps,
Gareth.
Stratus = Layer
Cumulus = Heaped
Cirrus = Wispy
Alto = Middle
Fracto = Broken
Nimbo = Rain-bearing.
So from this you can interpret "Stratocumulus" as a layer of heaped cloud, "Altostratus" as a mid-level layer of cloud, "Cumulonimbus" as a heaped cloud that is raining and so on and so forth. There's only a few common types that you see the majority of the time and a few that you'll never see since they don't make really sense (e.g.cirronumbus or altocirrus).
I'm sure some cleverrichard will come along and detail the caveats in even more boring detail to make themselves feel better about themselves, but what I've written above has been enough for me to work in meteorology for six years.
Hope this helps,
Gareth.
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 617
Likes: 0
From: Inside the roster matrix
Cumulusgranitous - Mountain
Try getting the Mike Wickson book - Met for pilots
Great read.
The Cloud Appreciation Society
Try getting the Mike Wickson book - Met for pilots
Great read.
The Cloud Appreciation Society




